ARTICLES

select a year

Publication: The Tribune

Date: August, 2002

Transcribed byffejy (ffejy138@hotmail.com)

page:
title: Tools of the Trade
author: Paul Kix
It is the most experimental band on the radio, with songs
venturing - as far as corporate airwaves are concerned - into
opus-like length.
Its music videos are provocative and strange and
disgusting and seldom seen. It is Tool, the heavy metal
band whose latest album, "Lateralus," debuted at No. 1 in
2001 on the Billboard charts and is expected by some to
outsell the previous, multi-platinum release, "AEnema" from
1996. "AEnema" sold over two million copies worldwide.
It is Maynard James Keenan, the lead singer, on the
phone from the latest Tool tour stop, New Orleans. On Sept.
6, Tool plays with opener Tomahawk at Hilton Coliseum in
Ames. It is Maynard who hates to be interviewed. Yet it is
Maynard who answers the questions in his low, flat voice.
The Tribune: How's the tour going?
Maynard James Keenan: Well.
TT: All right. Considering the length of some of your songs -
and the inherent "radio unfriendliness" accompanying them -
why has Tool become as commercially successful as it has?
MJK: Substance.
TT: Could you expand on that?
MJK: I mean, it's like "Apocalypse Now." It's a smash but it's
continued to draw
people to it because it's got substance.
TT: Is "Lateralus" your best album to date?
MJK: It's our recent one.
TT: It's your most recent. Do you judge it at all like that?
MJK: No. That's where we are today.
TT: Are you pleased with it, though?
MJK: We wouldn't put it out if we weren't pleased with it.
TT: Court battles aside (there have been problems with
labels), you guys said you wanted to take some time with
Lateralus. Get it right. Is this what Tool is capable of when
given freedom to explore?
MJK: Yeah. I mean probably more - if we - yeah. More focus.
More time.
TT: Is there a certain theme running through "Lateralus"?
MJK: Communication.
TT: Again, could you care to expand on that?
MJK: It's kind of covered on the album. It's - I don't know.
It's kind of hard to put into words. It's all about the music.
TT: I know this question's been asked before, but was there
pressure when recording this to live up to "AEnema,"
especially, you know, the time in between releases?
MJK: The only pressure we really have is the pressure we put
on ourselves to grow and expand our knowledge base and to
learn more about each other and communicate better.
TT: The cover art. The videos. With each new release, with
each album, fans are starting to expect ... would it be fair to
say something on a grand scale artistically - both in the
videos and the album covers? Are you guys ... paying
attention to this, with each new single, with each album?
MJK: Well, that's hard to say. We all kind of meet in the
middle on everything. So, it depends on where we all are.
We're paying attention to where we've been so that we don't
end up, you know, trying to repeat ourselves.
TT: All right. Now on to the tour itself. Will this be your first
trip to Ames that you know of?
MJK: That I'm aware of, yeah.
TT: Hilton Coliseum in Ames recently switched to general
admission, open floor. Did this influence you guys to play
here?
MJK: I have no idea.
TT: Is it safe to say though - because this is a recent
change, there have been some acts in the past that said they
wouldn't come to Hilton unless it had an open floor, bands
like Korn and such ...
MJK: We don't make decisions based on just retarded
(laughing) - No. I don't know that the band would even be
aware of the general admission. It's probably just all bull--.
TT: Is it safe to say that your live shows - all this open floor
stuff aside - won't include the sort of constant head-banging
seen at, say, a Limp Bizkit concert?
MJK: (Pause.) Wow. Let's avoid that word.
TT: O.K. We'll avoid that word.
TT: Will there be variations, additional solos at the show to
the already lengthy songs? Lateralus (the title track) comes
to mind.
MJK: Now why would I give all our secrets away?
TT: O.K. All right. I had a couple more questions about the
show, in particular, but I don't want to -
MJK: It's just best to come and experience this moment with
us. Share the moment.
TT: O.K. There have been some critics however who say that
your live shows - I was reading some previous reviews - they
need less artistic expression and more rough, hard rock. How
do you respond to something like that?
MJK: I don't. We do what we do what we do. And there it is.
It's what's comfortable for us.
TT: Why do I get the feeling though that you don't pay much
attention to what the media thinks anyway?
MJK: Because it's irrelevant. If the media were to - if the
media's opinions mattered they would be doing this rather
than talking about it.
TT: Uh-huh.
MJK: This is what we do. And we got here based on our
decisions and our communications with each other. And for us
to listen to other people's opinions it would be like a fifth
member or another five million members. We don't need to
do that. I wouldn't even begin to tell Scorsese or Coppola
how to make a film. Or like a different ending or someone
with a different name or a different actor in the film. I, you
know, that's none of my business. It's their film. If I don't
like their films or the way that they make their films, I will
watch other films.
TT: The band's name's significance: Is it using music as a
tool to a greater understanding of the world? Is that
somewhat what it is? Could you explain it if it isn't?
MJK: Well, your best bet would be just to go to a thesaurus
and look up the word "tool." And it's all those things.
TT: You have some scathing - rather scathing - opinions
about Christianity. Is your music your sort of religion? Is it
fair to say that?
MJK: Aah, I just have a problem with middle-men who try to
make profit on spirituality.
TT: Did you come to these conclusions by yourself? Did you
read some literature, possibly Nietzche, anything like that?
MJK: It's just clear. It's very simple. When anyone's ever had
anything simple to say about spirituality or our true nature,
it's strung up in some way and then some middle man profits
on the story by manipulating the facts.
TT: Uh-huh. I also was reading that you think information is
very pure. What are you trying to portray and such as far as
your lyrics are concerned?
MJK: It's just pure process. Looking at something, how does
it make you feel. And how do you react when it makes you
feel that way. If your heart is in the right place and your
intentions are good, you'll move through those processes in
a positive way that helps everyone.
TT: Your music - you said that it's something that's
therapeutic for (the band). If you're getting something out of
it, great. But you said you're not trying to preach any sort of
agenda or anything like that to your audience ...
MJK: You know the old story. You have a friend that's going
out with a pretty person, you can't tell him not to go out with
her, you can't tell her not to go out with him. They have to go
through it themselves. If they aren't ready to hear what
you're saying; they're not ready to learn from your
experiences, they're not going to. All we can really do is work
through our own experiences and hope that someone else
benefits from them who's ready to hear it.